Title: Welcome to the CLU-IN Internet Seminar
1Welcome to the CLU-IN Internet Seminar
- Negotiations Training for OSCs (Module
3)Sponsored by EPA Office of Superfund
Remediation and Technology Innovation - Delivered October 5, 2010, 100 PM - 300 PM,
EDT (1700-1900 GMT) - October 6, 2010, 100 PM - 300 PM, EDT
(1700-1900 GMT) - InstructorsMargaret Ross, EPA Conflict
Prevention and Resolution Center, 202.564.3221 or
ross.margaret_at_epa.gov - Deborah Dalton, EPA Conflict Prevention and
Resolution Center, 202.564.2913 or
dalton.deborah_at_epa.gov - Terry Brubaker, Terry Brubaker Associates, LLC,
415.497.1347 or brubaker.terry_at_verizon.net - ModeratorJean Balent, U.S. EPA, Technology
Innovation and Field Services Division
(balent.jean_at_epa.gov)
1
Visit the Clean Up Information Network online at
www.cluin.org
2Housekeeping
- Please mute your phone lines, Do NOT put this
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anytime - QA
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- Move through slides using links on left or
buttons - This event is being recorded
- Archives accessed for free http//cluin.org/live/a
rchive/
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3OSC Negotiations Course
- Module 3 Skills for Overcoming Obstacles
- Delivered By
- Margaret Ross, EPA CPRC
- Deborah Dalton, EPA CPRC
- Terry Brubaker, Consultant
4Course Credit and Course Evaluation
- Your certificate is predicated on attending
deliveries of all 4 modules of the course (total
of 8 hours). - After each module, please complete the Clu-In
feedback form. - Attendance for this module will be validated
through a roll call, and completion of the
feedback form and secret password. - We value and use these evaluations. We want to
provide the best, most relevant trainings, and
your feedback is key.
5Negotiations Course Learning Objectives
- At the end of this four module course, you will
be able to - Recognize opportunities to apply interest-based
negotiation skills to everyday interactions and
relationships - Explain 3 basic components of interest-based
negotiation and describe how to apply each
concept during the course of a negotiation. - Identify 3 basic communication skills that can
help in any negotiation and apply each in common
negotiation scenarios. - Explain 4 types of people problems, and match
each with appropriate strategies to overcome
those problems in a negotiation. - Identify when its appropriate to involve a
facilitator or mediator
6Negotiations Course Outline
- Module 1 Introduction to Interest-Based
Negotiation - Module 2 Communication Skills for Negotiation
- Module 3 Skills for Overcoming Obstacles
- Module 4 More Skills Ask an Expert
7Module 3 Skills for Overcoming Obstacles
- Obstacle 1 Our Reactions
- How do our reactions impact negotiations?
- How do I overcome unproductive reactions?
- Obstacle 2 Their Emotions
- How does their emotion impact negotiation?
- How do I overcome their emotion?
- Obstacle 3 Their Positions
- How does their positionality impact negotiation?
- How do I overcome their positions?
- Obstacle 4 Their Dissatisfaction
- How does their dissatisfaction impact
negotiations? - How do I overcome their dissatisfaction?
8Obstacle 1 Our Reactions
Speak when you are angry and you will make the
best speech you will ever regret. - Ambrose Bierce
9How do our reactions impact negotiations?
- Sender has an idea.
- Sender encodes the message.
- Sender transmits the message.
- Receiver decodes the message, completely freaks
out and attacks sender.
Tree
Tree
Would you let the tree thing go already?! I cant
believe youre bringing it up AGAIN!!!!
10How do our reactions impact negotiations?
Striking Back
Giving In
Breaking Off
- AKA
- Abandonment
- Can lead to
- Regret
- Having to start over with a new process
- Lingering anger or bitterness from other side.
- Needing to find a new way to meet your needs
- AKA
- Appeasement
- Munich 1938
- Can lead to
- Regret
- Encouragement to other sides strong arm tactics
- You not getting what you need.
- AKA
- Fighting fire with fire
- Giving a taste of their own medicine
- Use of superior force
- Can lead to
- Escalation
- Endless argument
- Occasionally, the other side backing down, but
possibly with lingering regret or anger.
11How do I overcome my unproductive reactions?
Give yourself perspective
- There are three keys to overcoming unproductive
reactions - Take a step back
- Recognize the tactic
- Know your hot buttons
12How do I overcome my unproductive reactions?
Give yourself perspective (cont.)
- 1. Take a step back
- To gain some emotional distance from the
situation, imagine yourself literally watching
the negotiations from a distance. - Buy some time to do this by
- Pausing and saying nothing
- Going back and slowly reviewing/summarizing the
conversation using neutral language - Asking for an actual break (to make a phone call,
to use the restroom, etc.)
13How do I overcome my unproductive reactions?
Give yourself perspective (cont.)
- 1. Take a step back (cont.)
- Things to do on your break
- Get someone elses perspective
- Think about questions to ask or ways to reframe
- Think about the other sides interests
- Appoint someone as a designated active listener
- Ask yourself what ten other things the speaker
might have meant.
14How do I overcome my unproductive reactions?
Give yourself perspective (cont.)
- 2. Recognize their tactics
- Provocative tactics come in three flavors
- Stonewalls Complete inflexibility, refusal to
budge - Attacks Threats, personal attacks
- Tricks Bluffs, lies, good cop/bad cop routines
- Identify the ploy being used, be familiar with
how its supposed to work, and youre less likely
to be drawn in.
15How do I overcome my unproductive reactions?
Give yourself perspective (cont.)
- 3. Know your hot buttons
- Prepare to NOT react
- Recognize your level of sensitivity to
provocation. - Think about the things that set you off, and why.
- Prepare a mental responses.
- Assume the best of people.
- Practice, practice, practice.
Between stimulus and response there is a space.
In that space is our power to choose our
response. - Viktor Frankl
16Check-in Question Our Reactions
- A property owner has told you repeatedly that he
will not grant you access to his property because
you are a Fed, and nothing you do seems to change
his mind. - This is called
- Stonewalling
- Attacking
- Tricking
- Dont know/Not sure
17Check-in Question Review
- In order to collect some samples, you will need
access to Joe Landowners property. During your
first discussion with him, Joe asks that you only
come on to his property while he is present. - Joe is expressing
- A position
- An interest
- Dont know/Not sure
18Obstacle 2 Their Emotion
19How does their emotion impact negotiations?
Strong emotion can divert or stifle productive
conversation.
Youre a liar! I cant believe youre doing this!
These standards are way too lax! Youre going to
let us all die!
20How does their emotion impact negotiation?
- Negative emotions like anger, fear, and distrust
can prevent the other side from listening or
negotiating and may drive them to extreme
positions. - Dismissing or ignoring those emotions can
backfire by intensifying and reinforcing them.
Remember Good people can have bad feelings.
21How do I overcome their emotion?
Change the dynamic
- Help the other side defuse their negative
emotions and regain their stability by being a
partner rather than an adversary. - You can do this by
- Listening actively (module 2)
- Acknowledging their points
- Agreeing wherever you can
- Acknowledging the person
- Expressing your views
22How do I overcome their emotion?
Change the dynamic (cont.)
- 2. Acknowledge their point
- Just as you can acknowledge emotion without
participating, it is possible to acknowledge a
point without agreeing to a solution.
First my husband left, then I lost my job, now
Im underwater with my mortgage. All I want to do
is sell and start over. Your clean-up is ruining
the only chance I have.
You know, I see your point. I dont walk in your
shoes, but if all that had happened to me, Id
probably see this the same way.
23How do I overcome their emotion?
Change the dynamic (cont.)
3. Agree wherever possible
- Look for and create opportunities to agree
without concessions. - Look for cues about what makes them comfortable,
and use them.
24How do I overcome their emotion?
Change the dynamic (cont.)
- 4. Acknowledge the person
- When people lose their emotional balance, help
them regain it by - Acknowledging their authority, competence
- Recognizing that we all have complex interests,
personal histories, bases for our choices
25How do I overcome their emotion?
Change the dynamic (cont.)
5. Express your views without provoking
- Do
- Watch your language
- Make I statements
- Yes, and
- Be confident
- Be optimistic
- Avoid
- Making assumptions, judgments, characterizations,
etc., based on their emotion - Trying to negotiate their feelings away
- Answering emotion with raw data
- Refusing to talk until they get it together
26Check-in Question Their Emotion
- A community member has become embarrassingly
emotional at a public meeting. You thank them for
their contribution to the effort and recognize
them for their deep knowledge of the community. - This is called
- Acknowledging the person
- Expressing your thoughts
- Agreeing wherever possible
- Dont know/Not sure
27Check-in Question Review
- A PRP launches an explosive diatribe against the
bloated, maniacally spending Federal Government,
and accuses you of trying to bankrupt his
business. You choose to reframe his statement. - Which is the best example of reframing?
- I think Im hearing a lot of anger about the
federal government, and Im also hearing that
youre concerned for the finances of your
business. Is that right? - Im sorry you feel that way, but were not
trying to bankrupt you. - Youre angry about overspending and youre
worried about these costs, both valid points. If
we work together we can figure out how to meet
all our interests at the lowest possible costs.
How do you think we should move forward? - Dont know/Not Sure
28Obstacle 3 Their Positions
29How does their positionality impact negotiations?
- Even if you are trying to engage in
interest-based negotiations, the other side may
be stuck in positional bargaining. - When the other side makes demands based on their
position, your natural response may be to reject
it and advance your own position.
- This can result in a stalemate and
hard-bargaining that prevents a constructive
solution.
30How do I overcome their positionality?
Dont reject reframe
- In order to move someone away from positions, you
will need to change how they perceive the issues
being negotiated and the negotiation itself. - When you come up against someone who refuses to
relinquish their positionality - Ask questions that change their perspective
- Go around stone walls
- Deflect attacks
- Expose their tricks
31How do I overcome their positionality?
Dont reject reframe
- Ask questions that change their perspective
- Ask problem-solving questions, like
- Thats interesting, can you explain why you want
that? - What if we did it this way?
- Ask for their advice
- What would you do in my shoes?
- Ask problem-solving questions
- How?
- Why?
- Why not?
- Avoid Yes/No questions that are easily answered
and dismissed
32How do I overcome their positionality?
Dont reject reframe
- 2. Go around stone walls
- Test their seriousness Ignore ultimatums,
positions and continue discussing the interests
at hand - Reinterpret the wall as an aspiration
- Test it for flexibility
-
Always be respectful and work in good faith.
Dont let your reactions get the best of you .
33How do I overcome their positionality?
Dont reject reframe
- 3. Deflect Attacks
- Ignore the attack and continue discussing the
interests at hand - Reframe the attack on you as an attack on the
problem - Reframe blame as a desire to do things
differently in the future -
34How do I overcome their positionality?
Dont reject reframe
- 4. Expose Tricks
- Act as though the other side is operating in good
faith - Always be respectful
- Ask clarifying questions
- Make a reasonable request
- Turn the trick to your advantage
-
Danger if you use these tactics without good
faith and respect for others, the incongruity
with your tone and body language will give you
away.
35Check-in Question Their Positions
- Ignoring an ultimatum in order to continuing to
focus on interests is an example of which of the
following - Exposing tricks
- Deflecting attacks
- Going around a stone wall
- Dont know/Not sure
36Check-in Question Review
- When might interest-based negotiation not be the
best strategy? - When cost is involved
- When the problem is very complex
- When there are multiple parties
- When there is a threat of violence
- Dont know/Not sure
37Obstacle 4 Their Dissatisfaction
- Build your opponent a golden bridge
- to retreat across
- - Sun Tzu
38How does dissatisfaction impact negotiations?
Until negotiators have met their needs and
satisfied their interests, no agreement can be
made (without force). Three types of issues must
be addressed in a successful negotiation.
EMOTIONAL ISSUES
PROCEDURAL ISSUES
SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Indigenous Facilitation and Mediation Project.
2004. The Satisfaction Triangle A Simple Measure
for Negotiations and Decision Making.
(Unpublished). ttp//ntru.aiatsis.gov.au/ifamp/pr
actice/pdfs/satisfaction_triangle.pdf
39How does dissatisfaction impact negotiations?
Emotional
Procedural
Substantive
- Issues
- They have other interests that are unmet.
- They might have made ill advised commitments to
higher ups. - There are institutional problems that block the
way. - Questions about the science.
- Issues
- They believe the process isnt fair.
- People involved dont have the authority to make
commitments. - Lack of familiarity with Superfund processes.
- Questions of agency who speaks for whom.
- Issues
- They are afraid of losing face.
- It is too much too fast, and they feel pressured
or overwhelmed. - They dislike the idea of accepting their
opponents proposal.
40How do I overcome their dissatisfaction?
Emotional
Procedural
Substantive
- Solutions
- Identifying interests and meeting them
- Generating options based on interests
- Using objective criteria to evaluate proposals
- Facing problems as a team
- Solutions
- Agree on ground rules, and use them
- Make sure the right people are at the table (or
the site, or the lawn chair) - Take a break, give them time to think
- Use a mediator
- Solutions
- Listen actively
- Ask for more input
- Ask questions about what a joint solution would
look like - Let them vent
41Check-in Question Their Dissatisfaction
- An elderly property owner is upset with the speed
at which things are moving. He is afraid to sign
any more papers and has refused to agree to
sampling on his property. - This is an example of
- A substantive issue
- A procedural issue
- An emotional issue
- Dont know/Not sure
42Check-in Question Their Dissatisfaction
- An elderly property owner is upset with the speed
at which things are moving. He is afraid to sign
any more papers and has refused to agree to
sampling on his property. - Because you have no time to waste, but you dont
want to upset the man further, you decide to
bring in a mediator to facilitate discussion. - This is an example of
- A substantive solution
- A procedural solution
- An emotional solution
- Dont know/Not sure
43Check-in Question Review
- Community member Nobody tells us anything and
we demand that you stop sneaking around until we
have an opportunity to review what youre doing
and why. - OSC It sounds like were not getting enough
information to everyone. What would you like to
see? - This is an example of
- Active listening
- Asking good questions
- Reframing
- All of the above
- Dont know/Not sure
44Questions? Thoughts?
45Resources Feedback
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